Thank you for that introduction, David. As David mentioned, I was a Stem customer while at Ameresco. I was also a customer to many other energy storage companies and Stem has always stood out amongst them. The quality of Stem’s products and strong customer focus, have long been differentiating factors. On the solar side, the PowerTrack brand is the industry standard for C&I developers. And for storage, Stem’s Athena software and subject matter expertise also stands out. The leadership team that David described, combined with the immense talent throughout Stem’s ranks, makes me very excited about the opportunities ahead. In implementing our new strategy, we will be focused on growth, but also on increasing operating leverage to maximize profitability. We are looking at ways to optimize our capital structure to fit this new strategy as well. As David said, in addition to my CFO role, I oversee the software and services groups, which takes me back to the refined strategy that David outlined. And I’d like to take a moment here to dive deeper into the four key strategic initiatives we have identified. Following our strategy review, we refined our go-to-market approach to lead customer relationships through our consultative energy services, innovative software and advisory procurement services offerings rather than battery hardware resale. Slide 6 illustrates how this shift allows us to engage with customers earlier in their project lifecycles. Previously, we would step in after a project had been de-risked and the customer sought hardware procurement integration services and a software provider. Now, we will collaborate with developers from the outset offering services to support a portfolio of potential projects. This change enables us to recognize revenue earlier and reduces our dependency on the success of individual projects. We anticipate these services to generate gross margins in the 30% to 50% range. Our service-based relationships provide opportunities to up-sell Stem’s software and edge devices. We have found that most service providers don’t have access to in-house software products and capabilities like we offer. So, we expect strong cross-selling pull-through. We generally earned 30% to 40% gross margins on our edge hardware and 70% to 80% gross margins on our software. Slide 7 outlines the three key reasons we expect to win business with our service offerings. First is market experience. We can bring dozens of clean energy subject matter experts to our clients along with over 35 million runtime hours on Athena. This leads to smarter initial designs and more efficiently manage systems. The second is technical expertise. We have vetted and worked with every major solar and storage OEM. We are hardware agnostic and we continuously evaluate vendors and technologies new and old. This helps our customers maximize flexibility while minimizing costs and risks. Third, software capabilities, in addition to offering our broader Stem software to customers, our team leverages specialized internal software tools to generate data-driven insights for our customers. Even though our service offerings are relatively new, we are not entering this business for the first time. Slide 8 outlined some great examples of how we have provided a multitude of services for a variety of our customers across different deployment types. Despite our stronger push into services, the core of our strategy revolves around software. Slide 9 shows our three key software products all powered by our industry-leading Athena platform. PowerBidder Pro uses our deep AI expertise to provide high accuracy market forecasts and bid optimization for our customers, while still giving them control over their power trading strategies. PowerTrack APM extends and enhances on our industry-leading PowerTrack platform for solar and adds storage functionality. And PowerCore EMS provides technical energy management between the edge and the cloud. Many of you were able to get a demo of the PowerTrack APM software at the RE+ Conference in September. We had fantastic feedback from customers on the product and continue to push forward on what we think will be an industry-leading technical and financial monitoring tool. This software will allow users to dive deep into the device level data and elevate analytics all the way up to the portfolio level. My last point on our new strategy relates to our future approach to energy storage hardware, which is shown on Slide 10. As you are aware, we have had mixed results over the years from our resale of third-party battery hardware. Going forward, we intend to lead with procurement services to advise our customers on hardware selection rather than directly purchasing battery hardware on their behalf. For some customers who want a full-service solution, we will continue to resell battery hardware, but only when the opportunity satisfies strict terms, including profitability metrics and cash flow thresholds. That said, we will honor our commitments to our existing customers with the projects in our backlog. Now, moving to our third quarter results and updates, which are outlined on Slide 12. Revenues were $29 million, a sharp decline year-over-year, driven by lower hardware resale revenue. On the flipside, we reported a strong GAAP gross margin of 21% and a record non-GAAP gross margin of 46%, which reflects a much larger contribution from high margin software and services revenue. As you recall, we issued certain hardware contract guarantees in 2022 and early 2023. This quarter, we reduced the value of receivables associated with those guarantees to zero on the balance sheet. We impaired the remaining receivables by a little over $100 million and also adjusted revenue by $5.6 million. We do not expect further material negative impact on our financial statements as a result of these guarantees. On the operating side, we successfully brought our first asset with Mercuria online this summer and we continue to see strong commercial momentum with the PowerBidder Pro product. In the third quarter, we increased ARR by over $3 million split roughly evenly between solar and storage assets. We delivered a record amount of edge devices from our facility in Longmont, Colorado and we reported strong growth in software revenues 10% quarter-over-quarter and 19% year-over-year. The bar charts on Slide 13 show that even though total revenue fell on a year-over-year basis, solar revenue growth remained strong, up 19%. Growth in solar revenue and a higher mix of services revenue led to strong growth in gross margins. We reported record services revenue $22 million this quarter, up 33% year-over-year, which included a little over $5 million of DevCo revenue. Adjusted EBITDA and operating cash flow declined slightly on a year-over-year basis due to lower gross profit dollars from battery hardware resales. The operating metrics on Slide 14 show that backlog fell slightly since the second quarter as we recorded relatively low bookings of $29 million. On the other hand, CARR grew by $2 million during the quarter. On the assets under management front, we had a slight uptick in storage AUM by about 200 megawatt hours and growth of about 1.6 gigawatts for solar during the quarter. Growth in both cases was driven by new contract additions and continued low churn. Now on to Slide 15, which outlines our revised 2024 guidance. Starting at the top with revenue, we are lowering our full year revenue guidance to a range of $135 million to $155 million. This largely reflects the push-out of storage hardware resale revenue. Our software and services revenue streams are still roughly on track for the year. That lower revenue forecast translates into lower gross profit dollars for the year, but a higher gross margin percentage. The lower gross profit dollars are driving the reduction in our adjusted EBITDA forecasts as well as lower operating cash flow. We have lowered our bookings forecast to $100 million to $500 million. We have left a wide range here, because we are working on some large deals that could transact in the fourth quarter. The lower bookings should also drive a lower level of expected CARR at the end of the year. Finally, before I hand it back to David for closing remarks, I want to talk about the implications of our new strategy for the future financial profile of Stem highlighted on Slide 16. First, over the long-term, we anticipate a lower overall revenue base, but much more predictable revenue growth. Additionally, we expect our gross margins to be significantly higher. The total contract value of our bookings will likely be lower due to two main factors: first, a reduction in battery storage hardware resales within our bookings; and second, a gradual shift towards shorter duration software and service contracts on the storage side, ranging from 3 to 5 years compared to the historical 15 to 20-year contracts. We will still have some variability in our revenue in 2025 and 2026 based on the timing of delivering battery hardware out of our backlog. Again, we are upholding our existing customer commitments, but over the long-term, we expect a lower contribution from hardware resale revenue. Second, we have moved quickly to reduce our operating expenses to reflect our new strategy. We expect to reduce our run-rate cash OpEx by around 15% between now and the end of the year. Most of the reductions will come from headcount tied to some of our old business lines alongside reductions in other discretionary spending. In short, we are laser focused on driving the company to profitability. Third, we are evaluating the financial and operating metrics the company will use to measure and manage performance going forward. Expect to see some corresponding changes in our reported metrics for 2025, including guidance metrics that align with software and services centric businesses. We will be looking to provide investors and analysts with useful information enabling them to better evaluate the company. As usual, we will provide 2025 guidance during our fourth quarter call. With that, let me turn the call back over to David.